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Steelers’ O-Line Ranked 7th In Pass Protection By PFF

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The Pittsburgh Steelers have one of the top offensive lines in football, and they know it. While they have developed a pattern of late of gradually getting better over the course of the season, there is no better five-man starting group in the NFL when they are all playing up to their capabilities.

This is especially the case in providing pass protection for quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, who was one of the safest quarterbacks in the league last season. According to Pro Football Focus, that is because the line was the seventh-most efficient in pass protection among all 32 teams.

“While they did allow 16 more pressures than they did in 2016, the Steelers offensive line remained successful at keeping their quarterback upright in 2017, as they averaged 44.2 pass-block snaps per sack allowed, the league’s fifth-best mark”, Mark Chichester wrote in a recent article for the company’s site.

“The brightest performance on the line came from right guard David DeCastro, who was one of just three guards in the NFL to play more than 500 pass-block snaps without allowing a sack. His performance earned him our Matthews Award, an award given to the game’s best offensive lineman”, he went on. “Without many changes to the starting unit heading into 2018, the Steelers offensive line remains an area of strength for the team”.

It’s also worth noting that they turned in this performance without having their starting right tackle for the majority of the season. Marcus Gilbert missed most of the year, but he still ranked as the fourth-most efficient offensive tackle in pass protection in 2017, posting clean snaps in pass protection on 210 of his 217 plays on passing downs. In comparison, Chris Hubbard allowed 32 pressures on 432 snaps in pass protection.

Overall, the line as a group posted a pass-blocking efficiency rating of 81.1. Roethlisberger was only under duress of any kind for about a quarter of his passing snaps, which was among the lowest percentages in the league.

So it’s no wonder that he was able to stay healthy all season. While he continues to tease the idea of retirement after any season, he has also consistently said that it is the group of linemen he has around him that gives him the confidence and drive to continue playing.

The Steelers have one of the most stable starting line groups in the NFL. They will be entering their third season with the same starting five on opening day, and really, the same group has been together for most of the past three seasons.

Aside from Alejandro Villanueva, the other four starting linemen have been in place to some degree or another since 2012 already. From left guard to right tackle, Ramon Foster, Maurkice Pouncey, DeCastro, and Gilbert made up four-fifths of their starting offensive line at the close of that year.
 
Maybe with this GREAT OL only a slightly above average pass blocking RB is needed........................

Sign the tag / affordable contract and get your *** to camp to help these team mates be even better, please.


Salute the nation
 
ALSO I thin k this Oline will be better this year than last. Injury is always the unknown factor and Gilbert is proving very valuable. I see Foster as the weak link but he is still pretty solid. GOOD JOB to the OL contributors including coaches / assistants / towel boys / trainers /owners / fans.




Salute the nation
 
They are good, but getting old. The Steelers need to start spending some higher picks on OL in the coming years. Don't need a repeat of the late 2000's.
 
Screw being ranked 7th.
I want to be 1st all season long.

Maybe with a healthy Gilbert, we can be #1. I think #7 is fair, and PFF in general is fair
 
I thought I read an article stating our DEFENSE was 5th in score allowed? Am I jacked???




Salute the nation
 
Maybe with a healthy Gilbert, we can be #1. I think #7 is fair, and PFF in general is fair

Maybe without using PEDs, he can help the team even more.

PFF “in general” is fair, is like saying....Mongo vs the horse is a fair match.


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They are good, but getting old. The Steelers need to start spending some higher picks on OL in the coming years. Don't need a repeat of the late 2000's.

We've been kinda stuck in the late 2000's funk.
Maybe aside from a few offensive play makers.
Defense has regressed a ton compared to the late 2000's.

Offense is better though.
The Steelers should know their window of opportunity to compete is
aging.
 
We've been kinda stuck in the late 2000's funk.
Maybe aside from a few offensive play makers.
Defense has regressed a ton compared to the late 2000's.

Offense is better though.
The Steelers should know their window of opportunity to compete is
aging.

And the window closes with Ben basically because they actually have a relatively young team. Outside of Ben, Gilbert and Foster are the only regulars on both sides of the ball 30 or older. So in that sense, the OL is the oldest group on the team and could use some youth infusion so that they don't go back to getting Ben killed if he decides to play 3-4 more years.

Mettenberger is actually set up very similar to how Rodgers was at GB backing up Favre. GB had a young D, great WR's, good OL, and an aging HOF QB wanting to play 3-5 more years when he was drafted. Granted Rodgers was a better prospect coming out of school but some mocks had Mettenberger going around the spot Rodgers did in the 1st. Both fell for similar reasons, not because of the lack of talent, but because other QBs seemed more "can't miss" and teams needing QBs prioritized them more.

If the D can take a couple steps forward, which is not asking a whole lot really, Ben's heir (whether Mettenberger or someone else) will be in great shape to take over a talented veteran team in their prime.
 
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